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FallGuide2009

Extreme makeover: Globe edition

Now more than ever, this is Marty Baron’s newspaper
By ADAM REILLY  |  March 12, 2008

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MEDIA BARON: Despite recent cutbacks, “This is a time for reinvention,” says the Globe editor.

Earlier this week, in an e-mail to the Boston Globe newsroom, editor Marty Baron announced the imminent departure of three key employees: executive editor Helen Donovan, deputy managing editor for news operations Mike Larkin, and business columnist Steve Bailey, who’s written the “Downtown” column for nearly 10 years. (Given the recent push by the New York Times Company, the Globe’s corporate parent, to eliminate 60 Globe jobs via buyouts, it’s likely that each of the three is receiving some sort of severance package; whether they’re part of the current buyout framework is unclear.)

In that same e-mail, Baron also announced three promotions. Caleb Solomon, the paper’s front-page editor, will become managing editor for news; Ellen Clegg, the deputy managing editor/Sunday, will take Larkin’s old slot; and Mark Morrow, the paper’s deputy managing editor for projects, will become deputy managing editor for the Sunday paper, as well.

Taken in isolation, these departures certainly represent — as Baron said in his e-mail — “huge changes.” And with no disrespect intended toward Larkin, who seems to have performed admirably in a high-difficulty, low-glory job, the exits of Donovan and Bailey are probably the hugest.

Bailey’s importance should be evident to anyone who reads him regularly, or pays even passing attention to Boston business or politics. With his aggressive reporting, frequent scoops (which often become front-page news), and acid commentary — e.g., saddling Deval Patrick with the moniker “Governor Slots” — Bailey has earned a reputation as the most influential columnist in town. His replacement, whoever he or she is, will face exceedingly high expectations; the fact that Globe insiders struggle when asked to suggest possible candidates shows just how hard filling that job will be.

Donovan’s significance is more subtle. Given her lofty position in the Globe hierarchy — she’s been the second-ranking editor for 15 years, and under two editorial regimes — her public profile is remarkably low. This seems, in part, to be a function of her personality. Colleagues describe her as a reserved woman who rarely ventures out of her office. But it might also reflect the fact that Donovan’s array of responsibilities kept her tethered to her post on Morrissey Boulevard. Her administrative responsibilities, which included overseeing and brokering relations between the Globe’s various editorial departments, would be a full-time job by themselves. But Donovan also served as the last read for the front page, meticulously reviewing each story on A1 before the paper went to press.

While not everyone appreciated Donovan’s management style, most people who’ve worked with her say she’ll be greatly missed. “In what we do, attention to detail is everything — and I have never known an editor who paid more attention to details, both journalistic and administrative, than Helen Donovan,” says one. “She has a vacuum cleaner of a mind.”

“Of all the changes we’ve had in the last few years,” another colleague says of Donovan, “this one cuts closest to the bone.”

Wins and losses
As that latter comment suggests, though, this week’s developments really can’t be taken in isolation. The latest flurry of resignations and promotions needs, instead, to be viewed in the context of everything that’s happened since Baron became editor in July 2001.

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Related: A new balance, Red all over, Savage love, More more >
  Topics: Media -- Dont Quote Me , Deval Patrick, Eileen McNamara, Eileen McNamara,  More more >
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ARTICLES BY ADAM REILLY
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  •   PHILADELPHIA STORY  |  October 01, 2009
    The local-media story line of the moment is the push by Stephen Taylor — Milton resident, Yale media lecturer, and former Boston Globe executive VP — to recapture the paper his family ran for more than a century, a goal he's pursuing with the backing of (among others) his cousin Benjamin Taylor, the former Globe publisher.
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    Last week, during an appearance on the Washington, DC–based Diane Rehm Show on NPR, Ted Kennedy biographer Edward Klein suggested that if Kennedy could witness his own funeral he'd probably crack a joke.
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    During Mitt Romney's failed bid for the 2008 Republican presidential nomination, he demonstrated a potent knack for wooing the conservative commentariat.

 See all articles by: ADAM REILLY

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